What was advertised in a revolutionary American newspaper 250 years ago today?

“Will be PUBLISHED … in BOSTON, A New Edition of COMMON SENSE.”
It did not take long after the siege of Boston ended with the evacuation of British troops on March 17, 1776, for printers in that town to set about publishing a local edition of Thomas Paine’s Common Sense. An advertisement in the April 4 edition of the New-England Chronicle, published in Cambridge, announced that “Next week will be PUBLISHED, and to be SOLD, by T. and J. FLEET, and EDES and GILL, in BOSTON, A New Edition of COMMON SENSE.” This edition would include “several additions in the body of the work: To which is added an Appendix, and an address to the representatives of the people called Quakers.” That the printers described it as a “New Edition” suggested that they followed the second edition that Paine collaborated with William Bradford and Thomas Bradford in publishing rather than unauthorized editions that Robert Bell, the publisher of the first edition, marketed after having a falling out with the author. The Bradfords described their edition as the “NEW EDITION” in their advertisements. They also inserted a nota bene that declared, “This Edition contains upwards of one-third more than any former one.” The Fleets and Edes and Gill replicated that nota bene in their own advertisement.
It likely came as no surprise to local readers that Benjamin Edes and John Gill got involved in publishing an edition of Common Sense. For many years, they printed the Boston-Gazette, a newspaper known for its strident advocacy for the American cause. After publishing the April 17, 1775, edition of the Boston-Gazette, they suspended the newspapers and dissolved their partnership following the battles at Lexington and Concord on April 19. Edes removed to Watertown, where the Massachusetts Provincial Congress met, and resumed publication in early June 1775. The Boston-Gazette remained there until the end of October 1776 and then returned to port city. Thomas Fleet and John Fleet, the former printers of the Boston Evening-Post, had previously collaborated with Edes and Gill and other local printers on other projects, especially almanacs. They published the final issue of the Boston Evening-Post on April 24, 1775, announcing that they “shall desist publishing their Papers … till Matters are in a more settled State.” They never resumed publishing their newspaper, but they joined with Edes and Gill in publishing a Boston edition of Common Sense shortly after the British left the city. Samuel Hall, the printer of the New-England Chronicle, may have attempted to give the enterprise a boost. The news updates in the column to the left of the advertisement for the popular political pamphlet reported that a “favourite toast, in the best companies, is, ‘May the INDEPENDENT principles of COMMON SENSE be confirmed throughout the United Colonies.’” The publication and dissemination of a Boston edition of Common Sense helped in spreading those “INDEPENDENT principles in New England.





























